Hello! good morning everyone, I have a new problem and is using the atmel Start, I can not open the file .gpdsc, I have this legend
y lo estoy haciendo siguiendo los pasos que me recomienda MICROCHIP que esta:
Atmel START User's Guide (microchip.com)
what might not be opening the file created by atmel start?. I would appreciate it if you could help me because I can't edit the files, thank you and have a nice day.
the version I have is MDK533 or keil uVision 5 and is the free version so la lite.
No, that's not what I asked.
I ask what Keil/MDK version the START export supports; ie, what version is it intended/advertised to work with?
If you're not using a supported version, then there's an obvious risk that it won't work!
antouriel123 said:the free version
So why not just use Atmel Studio (now re-branded "Microchip Studio") - seems the obvious and easiest solution?
Thank you for your answers, but I think even the question is foolish, I chose to use this IDE to program all kinds of microcontrollers from different manufacturers, not only I program the microchip microcontrollers, I think that if you were presented with the opportunity to program microcontrollers from all manufacturers in a single IDE interface, what would you do? Would you mess with each of the manufacturers and download all the IDE's from each manufacturer or would you find it easier to adapt the IDE as your native IDE from each manufacturer? At least I think that I don't know, maybe and I'm wrong.
That's why I ask if there is a way to drag or adapt keil uVision as a microchip studio?
Yes, I find it far simpler to use the manufacturer-provided and supported tools.
antouriel123 said:Would you mess with each of the manufacturers and download all the IDE's from each manufacturer
The manufacturers put a lot of effort into optimising their IDEs to their products - so there is usually little "messing" here.
Also, the vast majority are Eclipse-based - so very similar.
Atmel Studio is an exception.
IDEs aren't that different.
antouriel123 said:would you find it easier to adapt the IDE as your native IDE from each manufacturer?
As you can see here, that is where all the "messing" comes in!